I don't. I think there is plenty of evidence that it can work just fine. It's all in how it is handled, as evidenced by, well, all the different movies.At this point you’ve got to wonder if Trek is big screen material.
I would really love an Interstellar type of Star Trek movie.Ideally, they somehow capture Interstellar (a film made with $165 million in 2014 btw). I know Interstellar had Nolan directing but if they can hook the audience with a similar movie, something a bit more cerebral, less on the action and with amazing vfx, while maintaining the energy/optimism of Trek (particularly Kelvin Trek) then they can fill the void for that type of movie and success may follow. There was a string of these movies that people loved, Interstellar in 2014, The Martian in 2015, Arrival in 2016. A Star Trek movie could definitely be that kind of movie.
Augment blood. Ancient outlawed technology being able to do amazing things is kind of cool, IMHO. Pre-World War 3 era Earth would definitely engineer people to survive radiation.
The problem for me is when you keep piling on the dumb. There's a threshold. You've got the Enterprise underwater and tribble blood, if those are your only big dumbs, then okay, but when you keep adding more and more on top of that, then eventually the entire movie becomes dumb.
Trek isn't real, it's a goofy world where the gravity never fails,
The line of silliness is definitely subjective but it still amazes me where that line gets drawn for a lot of people. Human looking aliens? Totally fine. Blood based therapies? Not fine...![]()
Returning some one from the dead is a hell of a "therapy".
Spared no expense.Returning some one from the dead is a hell of a "therapy".
The technology has been outlawed since 1996, as per DS9. So no immortals....and resurrect the dead. Are they running tests with blood samples from the frozen augments? By Beyond it's possible every one's immortal (ignoring the fact that the transporters should already have made them all immortal).
I love Star Trek in the movies. I really grew up on the Star Trek TOS films, and those were massive events in my life. I loved when Trek returned to the theaters in style back in May of 2009. But then, Paramount dropped the ball on the momentum and popularity they had achieved with that first film. Yes, ID was successful, but it could have been so much more, and BEY (which I personally liked) was a total dud at the box office.
Current Star Trek in a nutshell.it only "failed" by way of absurd expectations.
I agree about Trek films being Events in my life. But, I disagree about Beyond in the "total dud" sense, insofar as 343 million is a respectable number for a non-tentpole film. The problem was budgeting it at 185 million! I like a big Trek film, sure, but no matter how much I like Beyond, it certainly didn't feel like a tentpole. It felt... like a 60 million dollar movie at most, which is a fine thing to be, but they should have made a 60 million dollar movie in that case, and then been happy with 343 million in box office. (Not to mention that they surely spent (wasted) approximately 185 million on marketing.) Anyways, not to harp on this little bit of a point too much, it just gets my goat when people say things of this ilk, like "TOS was made so cheap with its cardboard sets" and just... that ain't true in the slightest, and neither was Beyond a total dud at the box office, it only "failed" by way of absurd expectations.
But expectations are the only things that matter when a studio is deciding whether or not to further invest in a film franchise. So, as unfortunate as it is, for all intents and purposes, the film was a failure.
And if they spent 180M on marketing for this film, I sure as heck didn’t see it. The BEY marketing campaign was pathetic, especially considering that it was the 50th anniversary of the franchise. It was a good film and it deserved better.
Probably not even close. With the usual guess on the cost of marketing, it's probably still at negative 50 million or so... yikes.I wonder if Nemesis had turned a profit, yet?
I disagree. Spock had a more legitimate reason, in story, than Kirk did, in story in WOK, for the scream.This bit was definitely dumb.
Nearly 30 million of that, according to reports from Credible Reporter (patent pendingThe problem was budgeting it at 185 million!
The technology has been outlawed since 1996, as per DS9. So no immortals.
I disagree. Spock had a more legitimate reason, in story, than Kirk did, in story in WOK, for the scream.
Wonder what the budget for Orcis ST3 would've been , probably similar to ST09 140-150m (Paramount cant have been too happy at IDs 190m budget and mustve wanted the 3rd to cost more in line with ST09) so had it done about the same as BEY 350m mighve been ok to press on with a ST4 for 2018-19Nearly 30 million of that, according to reports from Credible Reporter (patent pendingfor @fireproof78 ), was carried over from the aborted Orci project, to be fair.
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